[[108]] Lord Glenelg.
[[109]] Alexander says “the Intabakandoda range” (vol. ii. p. 248).
[[110]] For Warden’s report of the conference, see Alexander, vol. ii. p. 335.
[[111]] These ants are most venomous—creep into the eyes, ears, etc., and cause a pain which no creature was ever known to bear without lamentation; in all other punishments not even a sigh escapes them.—H. G. S.
[[113]] Alexander, vol. ii. p. 222: “Nonubé, the mother of the young Siwana of the T’Slambies, ... is the great widow of Dushani.”
[[114]] The author seems inadvertently to have omitted the rest of this particular story.
[[116]] See [Appendix V.]
[[117]] So Alexander, vol. ii. pp. 134, 135: “A Highland piper was ordered to play for Hintza’s amusement. Hintza was asked what he thought of the music. He answered, that some of it reminded him of his children at home and made him cry, and that he supposed that the instrument had been invented by us out of regard for the General [Sir B. D’Urban], to imitate his crying when he was a little boy, and to remind him of the crying of his children.”